Fahad Hameed

Fahad Hashmi is one of the known Software Engineer and blogger likes to blog about design resources. He is passionate about collecting the awe-inspiring design tools, to help designers.He blogs only for Designers & Photographers.

37 thoughts on “7 Amazing Origami-Inspired Inventions”

While watching this video I was thinking:I would like some more visual content on what you're on about there, rather than just larget text on the screen. Example: Seeing one of those bridges expanding.You are still great, despite my criticism. Thank you.

Have you seen the recent discovery about how ladybug wings fold up in a spiral fashion, to fit them under smaller wing covers?And the fold ridges stiffen the wing against flying forces, when they are unspiraled into a nearly flat form.

Some feedback, after watching a few videos from this channel: SciShow suffers from too much talking and text and too little visual demonstration and documentation. I understand why (publishing rights etc.) but for me that means it's not interesting enough.

Another interesting fact, which will cause a stir: as the name suggests, centrifuges work by centrifugal force, not centripetal force. In a non-rotating inertial frame there is indeed no such thing as centrifugal force, it is an apparent force not a real one. But in a rotating inertial frame, such as that in which centrifuge samples are spun at high speed, centrifugal force is very real indeed, and is what forces the heavier sample fractions to the outside of the circle and the bottom of the tubes. Centripetal force acts in the opposite direction and couldn't possibly do this. Besides, in a rotating inertial frame, centripetal is an apparent force, and not a real one.

I'm probably the only one but the first entry already blew my mind, haha 😀 A foldable sturdy bridge for emergency, genius, why didn't we think about that earlier?! But this whole video gives me faith for humanity, maybe we'll make it after all C: